tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-19290181264383202692018-03-05T07:45:10.484-08:00Short Story WritingVintage advice for writers. Adapted from "The Writing of the Short Story", by Lewis Worthington Smith, Drake University, Iowa, 1902.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.comBlogger25125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-12734560246618770492013-12-08T07:56:00.002-08:002013-12-08T07:56:38.913-08:00Choosing a Good Title for Your Short Story<span class="smcap">Too</span> often the novice considers the title of his story a matter of no import. He looks upon it as a mere handle, the result of some happy afterthought, affixed to the completed story for convenience or reference, just as numbers are placed on the books in a library. The title is really a fair test of what it introduces, and many a MS. has been justly condemned by its title alone; for the editor knows that a poor title usually means a poor story. Think, too, how often you yourself pass a story by with but a casual glance, because its title does not interest you: experience has shown you that you seldom enjoy reading a story which bears an unattractive title.<br /> <br />"A book's name often has an astonishing influence on its first sale. A title that piques curiosity or suggests excitement or emotion will draw a crowd of readers the moment it appears, while a book soberly named must force its merits on the public. The former has all the advantage of a pretty girl over a<span class="pagenum"></span> plain one; it is given an instantaneous chance to prove itself worth while. A middle aged, unalluring title ('In Search of Quiet,' for instance) may frighten people away from what proves to be a mine of wit and human interest. A book headed by a man's name unmodified and uncommented upon—such as 'Horace Chase'—is apt to have a dreary, unprepossessing air, unless the name is an incisive one that suggests an interesting personality.<br /><br />Fragments of proverbs and poems are always attractive, as well as Biblical phrases and colloquial expressions, but the magic title is the one that excites and baffles curiosity. The publishers of a recent 'Primer of Evolution' received a sudden flood of orders for the book simply on account of a review which had spoken of it under the sobriquet, 'From Gas to Genius.' Many copies were indignantly returned when the true title was revealed."<a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="FNanchor_18_18" name="FNanchor_18_18"></a><br /><br />"In 1850 Dr. O. M. Mitchell, Director of the Astronomical Observatory in Cincinnati, gave to the press a volume entitled 'The Planetary and Stellar Worlds.' The book fell dead from the press. The publisher complained bitterly of this to a friend, saying, 'I have not sold a single copy.' 'Well,' was the reply, 'you<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="Page_66" name="Page_66">[66]</a></span> have killed the book by its title. Why not call it "The Orbs of Heaven"?' The hint was accepted and acted upon, and 6,000 copies were sold in a month."<br /><br /> <br />The title might almost be called the "text" of the story; it should be logically deduced from the plot; so a poor title usually indicates a poor plot and a poor story. This name line should grow out of the phase of the plot, rather than the basic theme, else it will be too abstract and general. It is so closely allied to the plot that they should be born synchronously—or if anything the title should precede the plot; for the story is built up around the central thought that the title expresses, much as Poe said he wrote "The Raven" about the word "nevermore."<br /><br />At least, the title should be definitely fixed long before the story is completed, and often before it has taken definite form in the writer's mind. That this is the practice of professional writers may be proved by a glance at the literary column of any periodical, where coming books are announced by title when scarcely a word of them has been written. So if you have difficulty in finding an appropriate title<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="Page_67" name="Page_67"></a></span>for your story, first examine your plot, and make sure that the cause does not lie there. In case you are unable to decide among a number of possible titles, any one of which might do, you may find that your plot lacks the definiteness of impression required by the short story; but a fertile intellect may suggest a number of good titles, from which your only difficulty is to select the best.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-2554079206977740372013-11-27T08:59:00.002-08:002013-11-27T09:01:42.122-08:00An Example Short Story Skeleton PlotHere is an good example of a starting outline for a plot (see <a href="http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1929018126438320269#editor/target=post;postID=5721776286774526615;onPublishedMenu=posts;onClosedMenu=posts;postNum=1;src=postname">Start With a Simple Skeleton Plot</a>), for a story entitled "The Ambitious Guest":<br /><br /><div class="blockquot"><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;1.</b></div>The scene is a tavern located at the Notch in the White Hills.<br />The time, a September night.<br />The place is in danger from landslides and falling stones.<br />The family—father, mother, grandmother, daughter and children—are gathered happily about the hearth.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;2, 3.</b></div>The tavern is on a well-frequented road.<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="Page_60" name="Page_60"></a></span><br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;4-7.</b></div>A young stranger enters, looking rather travel-worn, but quickly brightens up at his warm reception.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;8, 9.</b></div>A stone rolls down the mountain side.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;10.</b></div>The guest, though naturally reticent, soon becomes familiar with the family.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;11.</b></div>The secret of the young man's character is high and abstracted ambition.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;12.</b></div>He is as yet unknown.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;13, 14.</b></div>He is sensible of the ludicrous side of his ambition.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;15.</b></div>The daughter is not ambitious.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;16-19.</b></div>The father's ambition is to own a good farm, to be sent to General Court, and to die peacefully.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;20-23.</b></div>The children wish for the most ridiculous things.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;24-27.</b></div>A wagon stops before the inn, but drives on when the landlord does not immediately appear.<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="Page_61" name="Page_61"></a></span><br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;28-31.</b></div>The daughter is not really content.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;32.</b></div>The family picture.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;33-37.</b></div>The grandmother tells of having prepared her grave-clothes.<br />Fears if they are not put on smoothly she will not rest easily.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;38, 39.</b></div>She wishes to see herself in her coffin.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;40, 41.</b></div>They hear the landslide coming.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;42.</b></div>All rush from the house and are instantly destroyed.<br />The house is unharmed.<br />The bodies are never found.<br /><div style="text-indent: 0px;"><b>¶&nbsp;43, 44.</b></div>Even the death of the ambitious guest is in doubt.</div>You will notice that this working plot omits many little details which are too trivial to set down, or which probably would not occur to one until the actual writing; and all the artistic touches that make the story literature are ruthlessly shorn away, for they are part of the treatment, not of the plot.<br /><br /><span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/null" id="Page_62" name="Page_62"></a></span>This method of permitting you to study your crude material in the concrete will prove of value to you. It enables you to crystalize into ideas what were mere phantasms of the brain, to arrange your thoughts in their proper order, and to condense or expand details with a ready comprehension of the effect of such alterations upon the general proportions of the story. It makes your purposed work objective enough so that you can consider it with a coolness and impartiality which were impossible while it was still in embryo in your brain; and it often reveals the absurdity or impossibility of a plan which had seemed to you most happy. I believe that the novice can do no better than to put his every story to this practical test.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-57217762867745266152013-06-13T08:17:00.001-07:002013-11-27T09:07:58.300-08:00Start With a Simple Skeleton PlotThe plot of a short story should allow of expression in a single short, fairly simple sentence; if it cannot be so compressed there is something radically wrong with it. This may be called the "elemental" or "true" plot. It will be in general, perhaps vague, terms, and will permit differing treatment by different writers; yet its trend and its outcome will be definitely fixed. This true plot, in turn, can be expressed in yet more general terms, often as the primal truth which the story illustrates; this may be called the "theme" of the story.<br /><br />Thus in "The Ambitious Guest," the theme is "The futility of abstracted ambition;" or, in its most general terms, "The irony of fate." The true plot is:<br /><div class="blockquot"><br /><i>An unknown but ambitious youth stops at a mountain tavern and perishes with its inmates.</i><br /><i></i></div><i> </i><br /><br />In the development of a plot from this germ into the completed story, it is often of advantage to make what may be called a "skeleton" or "working plot." This skeleton is produced by thinking through the story as it has been conceived, and setting down on paper in logical order a line for every important idea. These lines will roughly correspond to the paragraphs of the finished story, but in a descriptive paragraph one line will not suffice, while a line may represent a dozen paragraphs of dialogue; then, too, paragraphing is partly logical and partly mechanical, and varies considerably with the person.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-75172916845567679392012-10-06T09:44:00.001-07:002012-10-06T09:46:55.672-07:00The Basics of Short Story Plots<span class="smcap">The</span> plot is the nucleus of the story, the bare thought or incident upon which the narrative is to be built. When a child says, "Grandma, tell me the story of how the whale swallowed Jonah," he gives the plot of the story that he desires; and the grandmother proceeds to elaborate that primal idea to suit the taste of her auditor. In like manner, before you put pen to paper, you must have in mind some interesting idea which you wish to express in narrative form; the absence of such an idea means that you have no plot, no story to tell, and therefore have no business to be writing. If you undertake to tell a short story, go about it in a workmanlike manner: don't begin scribbling pretty phrases, and trust to Providence to introduce the proper story, but yourself provide the basic facts. If you do not begin correctly, it is useless for you to begin at all.<br /><br />A plot implies action—that is, something must<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1929018126438320269" id="Page_46" name="Page_46"> </a></span>happen; at the conclusion of the story the characters must be differently situated, and usually differently related one to another, from what they were at the beginning. The event need not be tragic, or even serious; but it must be of sufficient importance, novelty and interest to justify its relation in narrative form. In general the plot of a short story involves an incident or a minor crisis in a human life, rather than the supreme crisis which makes or mars a man for good. The chief reason for this is that the supreme crisis requires more elaborate preparation and treatment than is possible in the short story. There may be a strong tragic element which makes it seem that the denouement must be tragic, but that is usually to obtain the effect of contrast. Yet the short story may be a supreme crisis and a tragedy, as are Stevenson's "Markheim," Hawthorne's "The Ambitious Guest"<a href="http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1929018126438320269" id="FNanchor_11_11" name="FNanchor_11_11"></a> and "The Birthmark," and many of Poe's tales; but these are stories of an exceptional type, in which the whole life of the chief actor comes to a focus in the crisis which makes the story.<br /><br /><span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1929018126438320269" id="Page_47" name="Page_47"></a></span>The short story plot must be simple and complete. The popular idea of a plot, derived from the requirements of the novel and the drama, is that it should be a tangled skein of facts and fancies, which the author shall further complicate in order to exhibit his deftness in the final disentanglement. Such a plot is impossible for the short story, which admits of no side issues and no second or under plot. It must not be the synopsis of a novel, or the attempt to compress into the tiny compass of the short story a complicated plot sufficient for a novel, as are so many of the "Short Stories of the Day" now published by newspapers.<br /><br />As nearly as possible it must deal with a single person, in a single action, at a single place, in a single time. More than any other modern form of literature, the short story requires the observance of the old Greek unities of time, place and action: its brevity and compactness do not admit of the proper treatment of the changes wrought by the passage of time, the influences of different scenes, or the complications resulting from the interrelation of many characters of varied importance. If the plot chosen requires the passage of ten years' time, if it involves a shift of scene from New York to Timbuctoo, or if it introduces two or three sets<span class="pagenum"><a href="http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=1929018126438320269" id="Page_48" name="Page_48"></a></span> of characters, it may by some miracle of ingenuity make a readable story, but it will never be a model one. In "The Ambitious Guest" the time is less than three hours, the place is a single room, and the action is the development of the guest's ambition.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-22073902088543588402012-09-18T08:42:00.001-07:002012-09-18T08:43:49.395-07:00The "Dramatic" Short Story<span class="smcap">The <i>Dramatic Story</i></span> is the highest type of the short story. It requires a definite but simple plot, which enables the characters to act out their parts. In its perfect form it is the "bit of real life" which it is the aim of the short story to present. It is the story shorn of all needless verbiage,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40"> </a></span>and told as nearly as possible in the words and actions of the characters themselves; and it possesses a strong climax. Therefore it demands the most careful and skillful workmanship, from its conception to its final polishing. It is the most modern type of the short story. <p>(<i>a</i>) The short story has <i>Dramatic Form</i> when the author's necessary comments correspond to the stage directions of the drama. Such a story is, in fact, a miniature drama, and is often capable of being acted just as it stands. It has a definite plot, but it is developed by dialogue as frequently as by action. It is the extreme of the modern tendency toward dramatic narrative, and is just a little too "stagey" and artificial to be a perfect short story. It is, however, in good literary standing and in good favor with the public, and it is most excellent practice for the tyro, for in it he has to sink himself completely in his characters.<br /></p><p>Examples: Hope's "The Dolly Dialogues;" Kipling's "The Story of the Gadsbys;" and Howells' one act parlor plays, like "The Parlor Car," "The Register," "The Letter," and "Unexpected Guests."</p> <p>(<i>b</i>) A short story has <i>Dramatic Effect</i> when it deals with a single crisis, conveys a single impres<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41"></a></span>sion, is presented chiefly by the actors themselves, and culminates in a single, perfect climax. It may, or may not, be capable of easy dramatization. It is less artificial than the story of pure <i>Dramatic Form</i>, but is just as free from padding and irrelevant matter, and just as vivid in effect. It allows of greater art and finish, for the writer has wider freedom in his method of presentation.<br /></p><p>Examples: Poe's "'Thou Art the Man!'" and "Berenice;" James' "The Lesson of the Master" and "A Passionate Pilgrim;" Wilkins' "A New England Nun" and "Amanda and Love;" Stevenson's "The Isle of the Voices;" and Irving's "The Widow and Her Son" and "Rip Van Winkle." But, indeed, every good short story belongs in this class, which is not so much a certain type of the short story, as the "honor class" to which each story seeks admittance.</p>Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-65166860795004350422010-02-17T16:12:00.000-08:002010-02-17T16:14:13.685-08:00The Humorous Short StoryThis almost belongs in the category of <a href="http://short-story-writing.blogspot.com/2009/11/ingenuity-short-story.html">The Ingenuity Short Story</a>, so largely does it depend upon the element of the unusual; but for that fact it should have been listed earlier, because it has little care for plot. Indeed, these stories are the freest of all in their disregard for conventions; with them it is "anything to raise a laugh," and the end is supposed to justify the means. In general they are of transient interest and crude workmanship, little fitted to be called classics; but Mark Twain, at least, has shown us that humor and art are not incompatible.<br /><br />(a) The simplest form is the Nonsense Story, as it may be justly called. Usually it has the merest thread of plot, but contains odd or grotesque characters whose witty conversation furnishes all the amusement necessary. If the characters do act they have an unfortunate tendency to indulge in horse play. The work of John Kendrick Bangs well illustrates this type of story. His books, "The House Boat on the Styx" and "The Pursuit of the House Boat," are really only collections of short stories, for each chapter can be considered as a whole.<br /><br />(b) The Burlesque has a plot, but usually one which is absurdly impossible, or which is treated in a burlesque style. The amusement is derived chiefly from the contrast between the matter and the method of its presentation. Most of Stockton's stories are of this type: notably his "The Lady, or the Tiger?" Mark Twain, too, usually writes in this vein, as in "The Jumping Frog" and "The Stolen White Elephant."Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-83361515063382681682009-11-09T08:50:00.000-08:002009-11-09T08:51:12.353-08:00The "Ingenuity" Short StoryThe "Ingenuity" story is one of the most modern forms of the short story, and, if I may be pardoned the prolixity, one of the most ingenious. It might be called the "fairy tale of the grown-up," for its interest depends entirely upon its appeal to the love for the marvelous which no human being ever outgrows. It requires fertility of invention, vividness of imagination, and a plausible and convincing style. Yet it is an easy sort of story to do successfully, since ingenuity will atone for many technical faults; but it usually lacks serious interest and is short lived. Poe was the originator and great exemplar of the Story of Ingenuity, and all of his tales possess this cleverness in some degree.<br /><br />(a) The Story of Wonder has little plot. It is generally the vivid description of some amazing discovery (Poe's "Some Words with a Mummy," Hale's "The Spider's Eye"), impossible invention (Adee's "The Life Magnet," Mitchell's "The Ablest Man in the World"), astounding adventure (Stockton's "Wreck of the Thomas Hyde," Stevenson's "House with Green Blinds"), or a vivid description of what might be (Benjamin's "The End of New York," Poe's "The Domain of Arnheim"). It demands unusual imaginative power.<br /><br />(b) The Detective Story requires the most complex plot of any type of short story, for its interest depends solely upon the solution of the mystery presented in that plot. It arouses in the human mind much the same interest as an algebraic problem, which it greatly resembles. Poe wrote the first, and probably the best, one in "The Murders in the Rue Morgue;" his "The Mystery of Marie Roget" and "The Gold Bug" are other excellent examples. Doyle, in his "Sherlock Holmes" stories, is a worthy successor of Poe.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-4221133361507847682009-09-07T05:57:00.001-07:002012-09-19T06:05:11.710-07:00The Length of a Short StoryThe question of length is but relative; in general a short story should not exceed 10,000 words, and it could hardly contain less than 1,000; while from 3,000 to 5,000 is the most usual length.<br /><br />Yet Hawthorne's "The Gentle Boy" contains 12,000 words; Poe's "The Gold Bug," 13,000; and perhaps the majority of James' exceed the maximum, while "The Lesson of the Master" requires 25,000, and "The Aspern Papers" 32,000. Indeed, the length of any story is determined, not so much by some arbitrary word limit, as by the theme with which it deals. Every plot requires a certain number of words for its proper elaboration, and neither more nor less will do.<br /><br />Just what the limit for any particular story may be, the writer must decide for himself. "It seems to me that a short story writer should act, metaphorically, like this—he should put his idea for a story into one cup of a pair of balances, then into the other he should deal out his words; five hundred; a thousand; two thousand; three thousand; as the case may be—and when the number of words thus paid in causes the beam to rise, on which his idea hangs, then is his story finished. If he puts in a word more or less, he is doing false work."Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-2215930996842086722009-07-27T17:52:00.000-07:002009-07-27T17:53:48.021-07:00The Offbeat Short StoryThis type of short story owes its interest to the innate love of the supernatural or unexplainable which is a part of our complex human nature—the same feeling which prompts a group of children to beg for "just one more" ghost story, while they are still shaken with the terror of the last one. It may have a definite plot in which supernatural beings are actors; but more often it is slight in plot, but contains a careful psychological study of some of the less pleasant emotions.<br /><br />(a) The Ghost Story usually has a definite plot, in which the ghost is an actor. The ghost may be a "really truly" apparition, manifesting itself by the conventional methods, and remaining unexplained to the end, as in Irving's "The Spectre Bridegroom," and Kipling's "The Phantom 'Rickshaw;" or it may prove to be the result of a superstitious mind dwelling upon perfectly natural occurrences, as in Irving's "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow," and Wilkins' "A Gentle Ghost." It requires art chiefly to render it plausible; particularly in the latter case, when the mystery must be carefully kept up until the denouement.<br /><br />(b) The Fantastic Tale treats of the lighter phases of the supernatural. Its style might be well described as whimsical, its purpose is to amuse by means of playful fancies, and it usually exhibits a delicate humor. The plot is slight and subordinate. Examples: Hawthorne's "A Select Party," "The Hall of Fantasy," and "Monsieur du Miroir;" and most of our modern fairy tales.<br /><br />(c) The Study in Horror was first made popular by Poe, and he has had almost no successful imitators. It is unhealthy and morbid, full of a terrible charm if well done, but tawdry and disgusting if bungled. It requires a daring imagination, a full and facile vocabulary, and a keen sense of the ludicrous to hold these two in check. The plot is used only to give the setting to the story. Most any of Poe's tales would serve as an illustration, but "The Pit and the Pendulum," and "The Fall of the House[32] of Usher" are particularly apt. Doyle has done some work approaching Poe's, but his are better classed as Stories of Ingenuity.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-59388494591141660412009-06-24T06:54:00.000-07:002009-06-24T06:55:12.993-07:00The "Moral" StoryThe Moral Story, in spite of the beautiful examples left us by Hawthorne, is usually too baldly didactic to attain or hold a high place in literature. Its avowed purpose is to preach, and, as ordinarily written, preach it does in the most determined way. Its plot is usually just sufficient to introduce the moral. It is susceptible of a high literary polish in the hands of a master; but when attempted by a novice it is apt to degenerate into a mess of moral platitudes.<br /><br />(a) The Fable makes no attempt to disguise its didactic purpose, but publishes it by a final labelled "Moral," which epitomizes the lesson it conveys. In Fables the characters are often animals, endowed with all the attributes of men. It early lost favor because of its bald didacticism, and for the last century has been practiced only occasionally. To-day it is used chiefly for the purpose of burlesque and satire, as in George Ade's "Fables in Slang." Æsop is of course the immortal example of this sort of story.<br /><br />(b) The Story with a Moral attempts to sugar-coat its sermon with a little narrative. It sticks rather closely to facts, and has a slight plot, which shows, or is made to show, the consequences of drinking, stealing, or some other sin. Usually it is either brutally realistic or absurdly exaggerated; but that it can be given literary charm is proved by Hawthorne's use of it. Maria Edgeworth is easily the "awful example" of this class, and her stories, such as "Murad the Unlucky" and "The Grateful Negro," are excellent illustrations of how not to write. Many of Hawthorne's tales come under this head, especially "Lady Eleanor's Mantle," "The Ambitious Guest," and "Miss Bullfrog." The stories of Miss Wilkins usually have a strong moral element, but they are better classed in a later division. Contemporary examples of this style of writing may be found in the pages of most Sunday School and Temperance papers.<br /><br />(c) The Allegory is the only really literary form of the Moral Story, and the only one which survives to-day. It has a strong moral purpose, but disguises it under the pretense of a well-told story; so that it is read for its story alone, and the reader is conscious of its lesson only when he has finished the narrative. It usually personifies or gives concrete form to the various virtues and vices of men. Examples: Hawthorne's "The Birthmark," "Rappaccini's Daughter," and "Feathertop." Allegories which deserve the name are sometimes found in current periodicals.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-3669352168953789362009-03-25T19:56:00.000-07:002009-07-27T17:54:17.085-07:00Short Story Writing: The Subjective and ObjectiveWriters, in their methods of presentation, may be broadly divided into two classes, those who write subjectively and those who write objectively. <br /><br />A subjective writer is one whose own personality, point of view, feeling, is insistent in what he writes. An objective writer, on the other hand, is one who leaves the things of which he makes record to produce their own impression, the writer himself remaining an almost impassive spectator, telling the story with little or no comment. <br /><br />Chaucer, in the prologue to the "Canterbury Tales," betrays his personal feeling for his characters continually, and so is subjective. Shakespeare in his plays is objective, presenting all sorts of men and women without show of his own attitude toward them.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-64554021603101649952009-02-21T08:05:00.000-08:002009-02-21T08:07:18.820-08:00Methods of CharacterizationIn our everyday life we are continually drawing inferences in regard to the characters of those about us, and we do the same thing in a story. Some writers tell us as clearly as they can the natures of the men and women they are revealing to us, while others leave that almost wholly for us to conjecture. <br /><br />We shall employ, then, two sets of symbols for character, one for direct statement of character, and one for character effects. The realization of character through direct statement may include presentation of motives, ideas, passions, will, special phases of development. It may come through report of the talk of others, or through statement of opinion generally entertained. c1 we will use for direct statement of character,—"John was a hard old miser,"—and we will add to this symbol the symbol a to indicate that this is only so far potent with us as to make us know the writer's understanding of the character merely, b to indicate that we recognize the writer's feeling for the character but do not share it, and c to indicate that the writer's feeling for his character affects us sympathetically to a like feeling. <br /><br />Another group of symbols, c2, c3, and c4, we will use for character "effects," for such knowledge of character as we gain by inference. c2 is a symbol for a general inference regarding a group of people or a community; c3 and c4 are symbols for inferences regarding the individual, c3 indicating the recognition of type or class qualities, c4, the recognition of more individual traits of character. The distinction here is merely one of matter of fact, a distinction not always to be made with sureness, since it is one of degree rather than altogether one of kind. When the way in which a man is good or cheerful or avaricious is differentiated for us from the way in which another man is good or cheerful or avaricious, he is so far individualized. <br /><br />Class characterization, c3, may be found along with individualization. The extreme accentuation of one or a few characteristics to the disregard of others gives the effect of individualization, but we shall understand this as in fact type characterization, since our natures are so complex that in almost no case can the conduct of any one be understood through knowledge of a few dominant traits of character. <br /><br />Individualization gives us intimacy of acquaintance; type or class characterization makes us see merely the striking, peculiar, or controlling expressions of personality. Guy Mannering in Scott's "Guy Mannering" is but a type of the conventional soldier. Tito Milema in George Eliot's "Romola" presents so many sides of a complex nature that we easily distinguish him from all other characters in fiction whatever.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-86795125015980797762009-02-10T07:56:00.000-08:002009-02-10T07:57:27.960-08:00The Two Things Requisite in WritingGardiner in his "Forms of Prose Literature" says very truly that the "essential elements, not only of literature, but of all the fine arts, are: first, an organic unity of conception; and second, the pervasive personality of the artist." It is true that much of our writing does not aspire to literary character, but in very little of our writing of any sort can we afford to neglect the first of these elements, and in very little of it do we care to leave the second out of account. Even in exposition of the simpler sort we may give to our writing the distinction of a more luminous style and the stronger appeal of a warmer personal interest, if we shape it into organic unity and make evident in it "the pervasive personality of the artist."Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-85320578046147471332009-02-09T17:46:00.000-08:002009-02-09T17:48:05.226-08:00Studying Short StoriesThe following is an outline that can be used for studying short stories:<br /><br />1. a. Upon what is the interest of the story especially dependent? b. Are the incidents presented rapidly and coherently, or slowly and disconnectedly? c. Is there a clearly defined plot or not? d. Does the plot have a climax of entanglement, or does it fail in developing this feature of the story interest?<br /><br />2. a. How is character presented? b. Are the characters well chosen for their reactions among themselves? c. Are the things they do and say continually consistent or not? d. Are they sufficiently individualized to escape the appearance of the conventional and to hold interest?<br /><br />3. a. Does the story state facts and happenings merely, or does it get hold of vital sensations and revive them? b. If so, in what ways does it seem to do that? c. In general does it seem to you subjective or objective in method?<br /><br />4. a. How much of the interest of the story is in the development of the plot and how much in the stirring of vital sensations, including sympathetic moods? b. Does the development of the story center about any idea or attitude toward life? c. What excellences and what faults do you find in the story?Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-27651625665296459792009-02-05T19:15:00.001-08:002009-02-05T19:16:17.312-08:00The "Tale" Short StoryThe "Tale" is the relation, in an interesting and literary form, of some simple incident or stirring fact. It has no plot in the sense that there is any problem to unravel, or any change in the relation of the characters; it usually contains action, but chiefly accidents or odd happenings, which depend on their intrinsic interest, without regard to their influence on the lives of the actors.<br /><br />(a) It is often a genuine True Story, jealously observant of facts, and embellished only to the extent that the author has endeavored to make his style vivid and picturesque. Such stories are a result of the tendency of the modern newspaper to present its news in good literary form. The best illustrations are the occasional contributions of Ray Stannard Baker to McClure's Magazine.<br /><br />(b) It may, however, be an Imaginative Tale, which could easily happen, but which is the work of the author's imagination. It is a straightforward narration of possible events; if it passes the bounds of probability, or attempts the utterly impossible, it becomes a Story of Ingenuity. It has no love element and no plot; and its workmanship is loose. The best examples are the stories of adventure found in the better class of boys' and children's papers.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-13435237647178479742008-11-11T08:34:00.000-08:002008-11-11T08:35:18.275-08:00Literary Presentation of the StoryThere are some fundamental principles of literary presentation which we may briefly review here. All our study of science, and in a less obvious fashion, of all the physical, social, and artistic world about us, is more or less an attempt to classify, simplify, and unify facts whose relations we do not see at a glance. We must observe and learn the facts first, but they will be of no great utility to us as unrelated items of knowledge. The need of establishing some sort of law and order in our understanding of the mass of phenomena of which we must take cognizance is so insistent that we early acquire the habit of attempting to hold in mind any new fact through its relation to some other fact or facts. In other words, we can retain the knowledge we acquire only by making one fact do duty for a great many other facts included in it. Our writing must not violate what is at once a necessity and a pleasure of the mind. Unity, simplicity, coherence, harmony, or congruity, must all be sought as essential qualities of any writing. We must also indicate our sense of the relative values of the things with which we deal by a proper selection of details for presentation, a careful subordination of the less important to the more important through the proportion of space and attention given to each, and through other devices for securing emphasis. Let us keep in mind value, selection, subordination, proportion, emphasis, as a second group of terms for principles involved in writing. We may also wish to give our subject further elements of appeal through what may be suggested beyond the telling, through the melody and rhythm of the words, or through a quickening of the sense of the beautiful. Suggestion, melody, rhythm, beauty, are to be included, then, in a third group of qualities that may contribute to the effectiveness of what we write.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-35666961898287683742008-11-10T15:50:00.001-08:002008-11-10T15:50:55.054-08:00MoodsThe moods in the characters of a story and their changes are connected with the incidents of the story, since they are in part happenings, and with the characters, since they reveal character. Apart from direct statement of them, we understand the moods of the actors in the little drama which we are made to imagine is being played before us from the things they say, from the things they do, and from gestures, attitudes, movements, which the author visualizes for us. If these moods are not made clear to us or we cannot see that they are natural, definite reactions from previous happenings in accord with character, we do not have a sense of organic unity in the narrative. We become confused in trying to establish the dependence of incident and feeling upon something preceding, and our interest flags. Everything that happens in a well-told story gives us feelings which we look to find in those whom the happenings affect in the tale, feelings which should call forth some sort of responsive action for our satisfaction. Clearly, if the characters are cold, if we cannot find in them moods of the kind and intensity that to us seem warranted, the story will be a disappointment.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-51505136133974283172008-11-10T15:49:00.001-08:002008-11-10T15:49:50.254-08:00Conceptual and Emotional WritingTheoretically all writing is divided easily into two classes, conceptual and emotional, the literature of thought and the literature of feeling. In the actual attempt to classify written composition on this basis, however, no sharp distinction can be maintained. Even matters of fact, certainly such matters of fact as we care to write about, are of more or less moment to us; we cannot deal with them in a wholly unemotional way. In our daily lives we are continually reaching conclusions that differ from the conclusions reached by others about the same matters of fact, and are trying to make these matters of fact have the same value for others that they have for us. This is true of our business life as well as of our social and home life. It always will be so. It is doubtless true that if our knowledge of matters of fact embraced a knowledge of the universe, and if the experience of each of us were just like that of his fellow and included all possible experience, we might reach identical conclusions. This is not true and never can be true. It is in effect true of a small portion of the things about which we think,—the addition of one to two makes three for every one,—but outside of these things, writing need not be and seldom is purely conceptual.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-55472972053076015122008-11-10T15:47:00.001-08:002008-11-10T15:47:30.732-08:00Kinds of DescriptionDescription is primarily of two kinds, that which is to give accurate information, and that which is to produce a definite impression not necessarily involving exactness of imagery. The first of these forms is useful simply in the way of explanation, serving the first purpose indicated in paragraph four. The second is useful for other purposes than that of exposition, often appealing incidentally to our sense of the beautiful, and requiring always nice literary skill in its management. It should be borne in mind always that literary description must not usurp the office of representations of the material in the plastic arts. It should not be employed as an end in itself, but only as subsidiary to other endsGreghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-46736718480769660602008-11-10T15:45:00.000-08:002008-11-10T15:46:33.298-08:00Concealing Your PurposeAn attempt to bring about a visualization or any other artistic effect in the mind of the reader is foredoomed to failure when in any way the writer's purpose too evidently betrays itself as such. Too much in the way of direct statement or predication is one indication of such purpose, and is therefore more or less ineffectual. For effective visualization some sort of preparation of the mood or sympathies of the reader is generally required. This, however, should be concealed, being accomplished through suggestion, as is the visualization itself.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-19066722103942791322008-11-10T07:31:00.002-08:002008-11-10T15:47:42.135-08:00Uses of DescriptionInasmuch as there are other interests in our lives than those which are established by our relations with our fellows, interests connected with the material world about us, any narrative will probably have occasion to include some description. It may be necessary merely as an aid to our understanding of some of the details upon which the plot turns, it may help us to realize the personalities of the characters, and it is often useful in creating background and atmosphere, giving us some of the feelings of those with whom the story deals as they look upon the beauty, or the gray dullness, of the changing panorama of their lives. Stevenson's description of the "old sea-dog" in "Treasure Island" is an excellent illustration of the effectiveness of a few lines of description in making us know something very definite in the man.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-58871362779472817882008-11-10T07:31:00.001-08:002008-11-10T15:47:53.244-08:00Interesting CharactersWe can hardly have any vital interest in a story apart from an interest in the characters. It is because things happen to them, because we are glad of their good fortune or apprehensive of evil for them, that the incidents in their succession gain importance in our emotions. We are concerned with things that affect our lives, and secondarily with things that affect the lives of others, since what touches the fortunes of others is but a part of that complex web of destiny and environment in which our own lives are enmeshed. In the story it is not so true as in the drama that, for the going out of our sympathies toward the hero or the heroine, there should be other contrasting characters; but a story gains color and movement from having a variety of individualities. Especially if the story is one of action, definite sympathies are heightened when they are accompanied by emotional antagonisms. In "The Master of Ballantrae," we come to take sides with Henry Durrie almost wholly through having found his rival, the Master, so black a monster. Such establishment of a common bond of interest between us and the character with whom our sympathies are to be engaged is a most effective means of holding us to a personal involvement in the development of the plot. There must not be too many characters shown, the relations between them must not be too various or too complexly conflicting, but where the interplay of feeling and clashing motives is not too hard to grasp, a variety of characters gives life and warmth of human interest to a story.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-38397473856476208232008-11-10T07:30:00.001-08:002008-11-10T15:48:01.321-08:00A Succession of Incidents RequiredA series of unconnected happenings may be interesting merely from the unexpectedness—or the hurry and movement of the events, but ordinarily a story gains greatly in its appeal to the reader through having its separate incidents developed in some sort of organic unity. The handling of incidents for a definite effect gives what we call plot. A plot should work steadily forward to the end or dénouement, and should yet conceal that end in order that interest may be maintained to the close. Evidently a writer who from the first has in mind the outcome of his story will subordinate the separate incidents to that main purpose and so in that controlling motive give unity to the whole plot. Further, the interest in the plot will be put on a higher plane, if in the transition from incident to incident there is seen, not chance simply, but some relation of cause and effect. When the unfolding of the plot is thus orderly in its development, the reader feels his kindling interest going forward to the outcome with a keener relish because of the quickening of thought, as well as of emotion, in piecing together the details that arouse a glow of satisfaction.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-34062961585813215892008-11-10T07:29:00.000-08:002008-11-10T15:48:17.465-08:00Elements of the StoryThis is meant to be a discussion of but one of the various forms that literature takes, and it will be first in order to see what are the elements that go to the making of a narrative having literary quality. A story may be true or false, but we shall here be concerned primarily with fiction, and with fiction of no great length. In writing of this sort the first essential is that something shall happen; a story without a succession of incidents of some kind is inconceivable. We may then settle upon incident as a first element. As a mere matter of possibility a story may be written without any interest other than that of incident, but a story dealing with men will not have much interest for thoughtful readers unless it also includes some showing of character. Further, as the lives of all men and women are more or less conditioned by their surroundings and circumstance, any story will require more or less description. Incidents are of but little moment, character showing may have but slight interest, description is purposeless, unless the happenings of the story develop in the characters feelings toward which we assume some attitude of sympathy or opposition. Including this fourth element of the story, we shall then have incident, description, character, mood, as the first elements of the narrative form.Greghttp://www.blogger.com/profile/15924201086701834480noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-1929018126438320269.post-68755736524983179152001-01-01T08:56:00.000-08:002014-11-27T08:56:50.038-08:00Privacy PolicyPrivacy Policy<br /><br />If you require any more information or have any questions about our privacy policy, please feel free to contact us by email at gsvaughan58@gmail.com.<br /><br />The privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us. This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected and how it is used.<br /><br />Log Files<br />Like many other Web sites, this website makes use of log files. 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